Lethbridge Herald

Starbucks arrests strikeaner­ve

CEO APOLOGIZES TO TWO BLACK MEN ARRESTED

- Ron Todt and Jay Reeves THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — PHILADELPH­IA

Starbucks sells itself as a community gathering spot as much as a coffeehous­e, a welcoming place with comfortabl­e chairs for lingering, trendy music and Wi-Fi. That’s one reason the arrest of two black men who were sitting in a Starbucks struck a nerve for so many: They were doing exactly what people do at most any of the chain’s 28,000 stores worldwide.

The CEO of Starbucks Co., Kevin Johnson, called the arrests a “reprehensi­ble outcome” and said he wants to personally apologize to the men, saying the company “stands firmly against discrimina­tion or racial profiling.” But that didn’t stop protesters from gathering Sunday outside the store in downtown Philadelph­ia where the arrests occurred.

As people ordered coffee inside, the Rev. Jeffrey Jordan led a crowd of a couple dozen in chants of “I am somebody, and I demand equality now.”

“It is a shame that (in) the year 2018 we’re still putting up with this mess,” said Jordan. “This country was built on the backs of black and brown people and now Starbucks is going to treat us like we’re second-class.”

In Washington, D.C., Gregory Wilkins usually visits one of three neighbourh­ood Starbucks for about 45 minutes before work to read the paper with his coffee or smoke a cigarette at the outside tables. Wilkins, who is black, said he’d consider going elsewhere if something like the incident in Philadelph­ia occurred again.

“If nothing is done about what happened, then yeah,” Wilkins, 56, said as he went into a Starbucks.

The arrests, which occurred Thursday, were captured on video that quickly gained traction on social media.

Video shows several police talking quietly with two black men seated at a table. After a few minutes, officers handcuff the men and lead them outside as other customers say they weren’t doing anything wrong; Philadelph­iaarea media reported the two had been waiting for a friend.

Officers went to the store after Starbucks employees called 911 to report the men were trespassin­g, said Police Commission­er Richard Ross. He said officers were told the men had come in and asked to use the restroom but were denied because they hadn’t bought anything. He said they then refused to leave.

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